This is such a great technique. I’ve been seeking this exact process for creating abstract backgrounds for my floral paintings. I cannot tell how the doors to my creativity have opened after seeing your video. Thank you so much for sharing.❤
I tried the technique with a small twist and I am so happy with results. I painted the room with an eggshell color, very bright orange. I then got that same orange and mixed it white until it was almost white/ivory and mixed in the glaze. I spread the glazed paint with a rag all over the walls and the result is a lovely peach tuscan look. I only wish you tube allowed us to post photos so you could see the end result. Its beutiful.
I painted this on my wall yesterday. Looks pretty great. A couple of tips, be careful with the brown, you really want a lot of yellow and touches of brown. Also, the pigment goes a long way. I will probably use only one bottle of the yellow and brown pigment but 4 bottles of the glaze. You can eye ball when you have enough pigment in your glaze. Lastly, don't over do it with the rubbing alcohol. I had a spray bottle, which was great but in some years I literally got rid of the paint as I started brushing with the badger brush.
Beautiful and simple. I’m anxious to try it. I think I might actually add a verde or brown mica powder to the alcohol when I try it. Thanks for the great finish technique 👍🏼
I had to repair a crack in a faux painted wall. Now I need to match the colors. Lucky for me it’s in a corner behind and over the entry door. It’s about a two foot square area. The colors you used in the video are almost just like the ones in the room. I’m going to look in the description box here for then info you shared on this project! Wish me luck and Thank you! 🙏🙌
Ron, I really love this finish. Did you upload the video for a similar effect on an orange peel wall? I can't see it. "when you let the glaze set up and rub a dry brush over and the glaze gets a very soft almost leathery look"
This is such a lovely technique. I really wanna do this in my living room now that I have so much time. The only thing is that alcohol is hard to find nowadays, like someone else pointed out during this pandemic and the price has gone up dramatically. Maybe in the future maybe easy.
Ron, amazing, absolutely amazing. I love that look. So the glaze is in the dark brown color? I may have to rewatch. If you just do that on the lower portion of the wall what color is on the top, just the mixed yellow & brown without the ETOH effect?
I am painting my kitchen - it's almost a complete match to my wall. I do want to do something like this with glaze. Thanks for the tips. Did n;t think ot hydrate before applying the glaze. This is the effect I want (without the alcohol step).
I have a small wall that has heavy texture from a plaster that’s at least been there 40 years. It’s a pretty neat wall. I’ve positioned it and the surrounding walls a true yellow. Was thinking this technique of faux painting would look cool. My question is do you think it will be over kill and would it even work on a very heavy, kinda sloppy plated wall? Any info you can give would be great! Maybe there is another technique that’s better for an already textured wall. Thank you so much! Love your work!!
Hi Ron, I'm remodeling my kitchen with a tuscan look and would love to paint my walls using this technique! I have a couple of questions: 1. I haven't worked with glaze before. Can you give us the proportions of pigment to glaze that you used for the yellow and brown glaze? 2. You make it look easy, but do you think this is something a homeowner like me who can do regular house painting but has no experience with glazing can do and achieve a reasonable result? I can experiment before applying to my kitchen, but I don't want to spend hours and have it look bad.
Hey Ron, you’re a true artist. I’m doing A room of four 9 x 12 walls. What is the percentage of the glaze/tint mix? And how much would I need for the four walls?
I really like your presentation on how you speak and explain things on your list of material you list the pigment yellow but when I checked Home Depot there are two types of yellow can you be more specific thank you
This texture looks like the surface of a cratered planet. Any chance you can make a video using the natural colors of the planet Mars, using the same texturing techniques?
Thanks fro the amazing teachings Ron! What type of sheen should i use for my protective clear coat/poly? I don't want to ruin the existing sheen from the faux. Thanks again for the techniques
Hi Ron, loved your video! I would like to achieve the same result, but with a green/blu peacock color. Can you give me please an idea on which 2 colours to use? Thanks in advance. Babs
Wow what a finish superb 👌🏻and great presentation, for the colour you have chosen if u was doing this as lower part of a wall, what colour would you suggest above it? Thanks
The pigments are all out of stock and unavailable. Cant find them anywhere in stock and not coming back to availability any time soon. What do you suggest as alternatives?
Hi, I really love this look. I have all the materials you said to get but I can't get the Chromoflo 830-2024. It's not available on Amazon anymore and I can't find it anywhere else. Also, I'm in Canada and I did find it on Pain Supply's website but it doesn't look like they ship here. Anything else I could use that's available? You do amazing work by the way, I hope mine turns out close to what you did here. Thanks
WOW! Just found your you tube video just now. Not only are you adorable to watch and listen to but also your smooth very detailed easy to follow helpful video is so informative that I can't believe the ease of the end result. I just bought a house that has a want to be tuscany look, but feel stuck with the overkill YIKES more than gold that you can imagine. I have an artist that is helping me with correcting its existence, but he wants to prime and start all over again. I just would like to know how I can achieve glazing a brown tone alternating walls. He disagrees. Do you? I'm trying to save money. Thank you in advance.
Looks great! I am going to try this exact technique on my kitchen walls ...However my question is I have textured the walls, is that going to take away from this final look?? Is it even worth putting this much work into it? Thank you
I tried it on textured walls and it didn't work. The nooks and crannies retain the bright yellow and make it really hard to make a smoothly transition between the strokes.
I mixed 1/4 tsp tint to 1 cup glaze and it came out super light. Not bad, but not what I was going for. If I choose to start over, I’ll def mix at least 1 tablespoon to 1 cup.
Sure you can, but you run the risk of damaging the finish so a sacrificial protective layer is only a little bit extra work, but will give the finish a much longer lifespan
Would the alcohol step be needed on a wall already textured with a light orange peel effect? Loving the finished look and your choice of colors, but not sure how will look on my textured walls.
J Dee the alcohol adds the effect. The orange peel won’t look the same. But I have created a cool look on orange peel when you let the glaze set up and rub a dry brush over and the glaze gets a very soft almost leathery look. I’ll make a video this week and show you
@@RonaldLayman Oh thank you so much! I admire many of you finished looks and wish I could achieve the same, but these textured walls are throwing me off. I recently watched your MM Shimmer Stone and fell in love with your final result. I need something to bounce light around in a windowless small bath and camo the texture.
@@RonaldLayman My trowel techniques are not up nearly as good as yours. Could you do a series on trowel techniques when going around obstacles like water lines or shower heads? I just today gave the walls a base coat of Sherwin Williams Eggshell, color called Honeycomb. I have spent the past week re-re-re-watching all your videos. I still favor your one titled Tuscany gold, faux painting techniques for walls, though I am eager to see what you are going to put together for orange peel walls. Could good quality metallic paints be mixed with MM water based glaze to produce a favorable effect? Thinking already of next project, something stunning for my focal wall at the staircase landing.
I’m so frustrated now😢😢. I have watched the vid at least 10 times, have the modern masters glaze nd the pigments u used but nowhere do I see the proportions to mix them. Please please reply. Thank u🙏
You are amazing!! Watched many other videos you posted also. I'm going with this to do large area and have question. How much pigment do I add to the 32oz glaze? I followed your links for supplies and in shopping cart. So excited to do this. I did check out your company but you didn't work in my near outer banks NC. Can you please tell me how much pigment to add to the 32 oz of glaze? Thanks Karen
Found out myself but there is no percent to aim for it's personal taste so try on a piece of sheetrock before you do a wall. Half a cup of glaze in my case per 1/8 teaspoon paint/tint worked just fine and the most important thing was to mix the colors when dabbing the plastic bag. Otherwise you get a giraffe effect!
I put too much yellow in my second batch and used it. Can you tell me if there is a trick to lighten up the color after it's dried? Can I re-glaze over the dried area to tone it down?
I've painted my walls with a yellow base flat, which I don't like the color. Does my base have to be a satin finish to be able to get the effect that you have shown us? Please reply. Thanks!
Flat paint will absorb the glaze making it dry quicker and harder to manipulate. That’s why eggshell low sheen or satin are highly recommended in order to achieve the effect as shown in the process
This might sound like a dumb question...BUT...if I have an light aqua wall...how could I do this? Any suggestions? Or would it look awful? Im trying to imagine an aqua wall with this kind of finish...But my imagination won't take me there.
Good stuff, Ron. I wouldn't fault you for getting some kind of promo consideration from Modern Masters, but regardless, is there a DIY method to produce glazes, for those of us who are too remotely-located, poor, or just independently-minded and adventurous to immediately run to the brand-name stuff? Also in this and some other videos, it would be interesting to know what effects can be handled as a solo act, versus those that require a helper (or two) to keep a wet surface, edge, etc. In this video, I found myself wondering how far I could get with the various glaze-working steps before worrying about it skinning over or otherwise becoming un-blendable, and if that's a problem, where and how I'd blend it from one session to the next.
I used the cheapest glazed the hardware store had and it worked great. For anbarea of 300 ft I probably used 1/4 of glaze and less of 1/2 of paint for the glazing technique itself. If you do it with a rag and in seçtions of no bigger than maybe 3 feet at a time you will donfine by yourself. I did by myself and finished glazing in less than 2 hours. I just moved my rag as if I was wiping the walls.
Can i use 70% alcohol?and what if i dont use glaze paint,will it be different?because i cant find any glaze here in philippines.i dont think we have what you used..please reply😍😍😍
Can anyone answer question for me? I am ready to do very large area but using a small badger brush for large wall seems crazy to me. That would take forever. Is there another type of large brush I can use or would I have to use small badger brush???? If anyone can help please let me know.
@@RonaldLayman Thank you so much for replying! Since I have such a large area, wall is like 17' high, I guess I just need to do small area at time. Wish you worked out here near Nags Head N.C.
Gorgeous! Gonna follow this tutorial for my kitchen.
This is such a great technique. I’ve been seeking this exact process for creating abstract backgrounds for my floral paintings. I cannot tell how the doors to my creativity have opened after seeing your video. Thank you so much for sharing.❤
I tried the technique with a small twist and I am so happy with results. I painted the room with an eggshell color, very bright orange. I then got that same orange and mixed it white until it was almost white/ivory and mixed in the glaze. I spread the glazed paint with a rag all over the walls and the result is a lovely peach tuscan look. I only wish you tube allowed us to post photos so you could see the end result. Its beutiful.
I would love to see this. Do you have instagram to send it over?
This is exactly the color and effected I've been searching for for my entry way. Thanks
I painted this on my wall yesterday. Looks pretty great. A couple of tips, be careful with the brown, you really want a lot of yellow and touches of brown. Also, the pigment goes a long way. I will probably use only one bottle of the yellow and brown pigment but 4 bottles of the glaze. You can eye ball when you have enough pigment in your glaze. Lastly, don't over do it with the rubbing alcohol. I had a spray bottle, which was great but in some years I literally got rid of the paint as I started brushing with the badger brush.
OMGGG. This is GOLD. Thank you Ronald!! It views kinda metallic too. I absolutely Love everything Tuscan and old world and this is on the mark WOW!!!
That's gorgeous. Good job. Thanks.
Beautiful and simple. I’m anxious to try it. I think I might actually add a verde or brown mica powder to the alcohol when I try it. Thanks for the great finish technique 👍🏼
I love this technique, Ron. Thanks for sharing your vast knowledge and experience.
Great video, very straightforward instruction. Thank you!
Yeah that’s super cool .
Wow, very cool look there!
Thank you!! Love this look. And nice hair!!
I had to repair a crack in a faux painted wall. Now I need to match the colors. Lucky for me it’s in a corner behind and over the entry door. It’s about a two foot square area. The colors you used in the video are almost just like the ones in the room.
I’m going to look in the description box here for then info you shared on this project! Wish me luck and Thank you! 🙏🙌
Wonderful process, well described, you’re inspiring.
OMG I tried this about controlling it with the yellow and it works 💯 so do I love this finish cheers Ron 🙏🏼👌🏼🇬🇧
Brilliant thank you
Ron, I really love this finish. Did you upload the video for a similar effect on an orange peel wall? I can't see it. "when you let the glaze set up and rub a dry brush over and the glaze gets a very soft almost leathery look"
This is exactly what I’ve been looking for. Can you do this technique over an acrylic Gesso on canvas?
Awesome. I was wanting a texture similar to aged walls in italy.
Dude……you are good..love the vid…..informative, creative and very entertaining. Crap happens to other people as well as myself with painters tape.
This is such a lovely technique. I really wanna do this in my living room now that I have so much time. The only thing is that alcohol is hard to find nowadays, like someone else pointed out during this pandemic and the price has gone up dramatically. Maybe in the future maybe easy.
Try a rag, dab with a cotton rag. It takes a bit more creativity but you can get something similar.
losreyesguerrero thank you 🙏
Can this be done on exterior surface using ??? what products
Absolutely amazing.
Ron, amazing, absolutely amazing. I love that look. So the glaze is in the dark brown color? I may have to rewatch. If you just do that on the lower portion of the wall what color is on the top, just the mixed yellow & brown without the ETOH effect?
Gorgeous! Thanks for sharing your technique.
Awesome! Thanks.
Do you use antique glasé
I am painting my kitchen - it's almost a complete match to my wall. I do want to do something like this with glaze. Thanks for the tips. Did n;t think ot hydrate before applying the glaze. This is the effect I want (without the alcohol step).
Can you use the alcohol step (and your entire process rather) on ceilings before you pull with the badger brush?
Thank you!
Beautiful work! It's gonna be hard, if not impossible to find rubbing alcohol since people are hoarding these items.
Loralieisa M you’re so right. I’d love my whole living room like this. I’d definitely need a lot of alcohol. These damn hoarders ugghhh haha.
I ordered rubbing alc Amazon. Should get here in three weeks.
I have a small wall that has heavy texture from a plaster that’s at least been there 40 years. It’s a pretty neat wall. I’ve positioned it and the surrounding walls a true yellow. Was thinking this technique of faux painting would look cool. My question is do you think it will be over kill and would it even work on a very heavy, kinda sloppy plated wall?
Any info you can give would be great! Maybe there is another technique that’s better for an already textured wall.
Thank you so much!
Love your work!!
that's beautiful. I am going to do my bathroom tomorrow but would like to know how much wall to do at aa time. My bathroom is 10x12
Hi Ron,
I'm remodeling my kitchen with a tuscan look and would love to paint my walls using this technique! I have a couple of questions:
1. I haven't worked with glaze before. Can you give us the proportions of pigment to glaze that you used for the yellow and brown glaze?
2. You make it look easy, but do you think this is something a homeowner like me who can do regular house painting but has no experience with glazing can do and achieve a reasonable result? I can experiment before applying to my kitchen, but I don't want to spend hours and have it look bad.
What?!? That is absolutely gorgeous! Any chance you could show us how to deal with the edges of the sections when doing a whole wall?
Hey Ron, you’re a true artist. I’m doing A room of four 9 x 12 walls. What is the percentage of the glaze/tint mix? And how much would I need for the four walls?
I'm want to learning . Nice work 👌
I love it!
I really like your presentation on how you speak and explain things on your list of material you list the pigment yellow but when I checked Home Depot there are two types of yellow can you be more specific thank you
Genius!!!👍👍 I loved it! Thank you for sharing! New subscriber!
This texture looks like the surface of a cratered planet. Any chance you can make a video using the natural colors of the planet Mars, using the same texturing techniques?
Lovely! Great instruction!
This is super impressive thank you for the demonstration superb craftsmanship
can this finish be done on a ceiling? THanks
Can you do this on a textured wall or does it need to be a smooth wall?
Thanks fro the amazing teachings Ron! What type of sheen should i use for my protective clear coat/poly? I don't want to ruin the existing sheen from the faux. Thanks again for the techniques
Beautiful finish Ron
Where can I get the exact paint codes and everything for the exact same look
I need to do a larger area. Do I do your technique on my entire wall 10x15, or small areas at a time? I will be doing this on an exterior wall. Ty
The link to the brown pigment directed me to the red color. What colors are you using?
On your list of material on your yellow pigment Home Depot has two listed interior yellow and light yellow which one do you use
Would you recommend this for a medieval tavern look?
It's so cool!! How do I start over when I screw it up the first time?
Hi!
I love your work!
where can I find the description of the materials , what you used?
Thank you
How hard is this to repair layer or keep wiped down from pets.
Looks really nice and would match my house nicely.
Very cool.
After you blended the colors with the plastic, could you smooth out the patterns with the badger brush?
Love your videos Thank You very much 😊some links for materials sometimes don’t work 😢
All of the kinks are being updated now and will be working by midnight
Hi Ron, loved your video! I would like to achieve the same result, but with a green/blu peacock color. Can you give me please an idea on which 2 colours to use? Thanks in advance. Babs
How to you get the wall effect of muted paints like in the Jennifer Lopez older movie called the cell?
Wow what a finish superb 👌🏻and great presentation, for the colour you have chosen if u was doing this as lower part of a wall, what colour would you suggest above it? Thanks
The pigments are all out of stock and unavailable. Cant find them anywhere in stock and not coming back to availability any time soon. What do you suggest as alternatives?
thank you
Can you do this technique over a matte finish paint?
Would it work for gold and teal? I would have to do the brown and yellow then a teal and maybe a light green?
Hi, I really love this look. I have all the materials you said to get but I can't get the Chromoflo 830-2024. It's not available on Amazon anymore and I can't find it anywhere else. Also, I'm in Canada and I did find it on Pain Supply's website but it doesn't look like they ship here. Anything else I could use that's available? You do amazing work by the way, I hope mine turns out close to what you did here. Thanks
The links for the yellow and brown pigments are both the same, raw umber. What is the yellow color called?
WOW! Just found your you tube video just now. Not only are you adorable to watch and listen to but also your smooth very detailed easy to follow helpful video is so informative that I can't believe the ease of the end result. I just bought a house that has a want to be tuscany look, but feel stuck with the overkill YIKES more than gold that you can imagine. I have an artist that is helping me with correcting its existence, but he wants to prime and start all over again. I just would like to know how I can achieve glazing a brown tone alternating walls. He disagrees. Do you? I'm trying to save money. Thank you in advance.
Awesome
What if I want to do a very subtle gray color scheme. Base coat already down is Origami White eggshell.
looking for the list of paints you used for this old world finish and am unable to find them; please help
Looks great! I am going to try this exact technique on my kitchen walls ...However my question is I have textured the walls, is that going to take away from this final look?? Is it even worth putting this much work into it? Thank you
I tried it on textured walls and it didn't work. The nooks and crannies retain the bright yellow and make it really hard to make a smoothly transition between the strokes.
I mixed 1/4 tsp tint to 1 cup glaze and it came out super light. Not bad, but not what I was going for. If I choose to start over, I’ll def mix at least 1 tablespoon to 1 cup.
. where can I find the exact products used for this technique?
What if my walls are all yellow do I need to start all over with the off white sort of work backwards to get that same look
Same question here. What did you do with the wall?
Hello, if I dothis on a pice of furniture should I use some kind of clear coat? Thank you
Yes, I use a water-based polyurethane at least one coat, if not to Minwax is sufficient
Great video.
Can you wash the walls later without Polly on it?
Sure you can, but you run the risk of damaging the finish so a sacrificial protective layer is only a little bit extra work, but will give the finish a much longer lifespan
How do u tint the glaze does Modron masters have the tint?
beautiful! can i do this to a cement floor? do i need special paint? also it is about 1500 sqft. any suggestions for effeciency?
I have a new product that’s exactly like marmorino but designed for floors. I’ll have a video and all the information online next Thursday at 8pm
Hi, can you please tell me what colors you used and how to tint the glaze ?
I have a gallon of Benjamin moore clear glaze how do I use it ?
Hey please provide materials and color list thanks!
Can I use eggshell rather than satin for the Gold Tuscan wall?
Hi! Quick question, do you mix the alcohol with water? If so how many ounces water by alcohol? Thanks for doing this videos , new subscriptor
@@RonaldLayman 👍🏻🤟🏻thanks
Would the alcohol step be needed on a wall already textured with a light orange peel effect? Loving the finished look and your choice of colors, but not sure how will look on my textured walls.
J Dee the alcohol adds the effect. The orange peel won’t look the same. But I have created a cool look on orange peel when you let the glaze set up and rub a dry brush over and the glaze gets a very soft almost leathery look. I’ll make a video this week and show you
@@RonaldLayman Oh thank you so much! I admire many of you finished looks and wish I could achieve the same, but these textured walls are throwing me off. I recently watched your MM Shimmer Stone and fell in love with your final result. I need something to bounce light around in a windowless small bath and camo the texture.
You could always skim the wall with two coats of modern masters texture effects to burry the texture.
@@RonaldLayman My trowel techniques are not up nearly as good as yours. Could you do a series on trowel techniques when going around obstacles like water lines or shower heads? I just today gave the walls a base coat of Sherwin Williams Eggshell, color called Honeycomb. I have spent the past week re-re-re-watching all your videos. I still favor your one titled Tuscany gold, faux painting techniques for walls, though I am eager to see what you are going to put together for orange peel walls. Could good quality metallic paints be mixed with MM water based glaze to produce a favorable effect? Thinking already of next project, something stunning for my focal wall at the staircase landing.
I’m so frustrated now😢😢. I have watched the vid at least 10 times, have the modern masters glaze nd the pigments u used but nowhere do I see the proportions to mix them. Please please reply. Thank u🙏
wow!!
Beautiful finish and a wonderfully simple explanation! Thanks for the inspiration! :-)
You are amazing!! Watched many other videos you posted also. I'm going with this to do large area and have question. How much pigment do I add to the 32oz glaze? I followed your links for supplies and in shopping cart. So excited to do this. I did check out your company but you didn't work in my near outer banks NC. Can you please tell me how much pigment to add to the 32 oz of glaze?
Thanks
Karen
Ronald Layman can you give me the % for mixing the pigment into the glaze for the shade brown you have here? Thx
Please answer lol
Found out myself but there is no percent to aim for it's personal taste so try on a piece of sheetrock before you do a wall. Half a cup of glaze in my case per 1/8 teaspoon paint/tint worked just fine and the most important thing was to mix the colors when dabbing the plastic bag. Otherwise you get a giraffe effect!
Thank you C C
@@clintcordero I have a gallon of clear glaze. should I mix the pigment in that and I don't need to but any paint ?
I put too much yellow in my second batch and used it. Can you tell me if there is a trick to lighten up the color after it's dried? Can I re-glaze over the dried area to tone it down?
I’ll discuss this in mondays live stream q and a at 8pm eastern
thank you and how can I see your live stream to fix my mistake?
Ty❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Is there anyway to do this with a matte finish ?
Yes , order matte glaze
I've painted my walls with a yellow base flat, which I don't like the color. Does my base have to be a satin finish to be able to get the effect that you have shown us? Please reply. Thanks!
Flat paint will absorb the glaze making it dry quicker and harder to manipulate. That’s why eggshell low sheen or satin are highly recommended in order to achieve the effect as shown in the process
This might sound like a dumb question...BUT...if I have an light aqua wall...how could I do this? Any suggestions? Or would it look awful? Im trying to imagine an aqua wall with this kind of finish...But my imagination won't take me there.
Maybe you could use turquoise blue and dark teal. :)
Good stuff, Ron. I wouldn't fault you for getting some kind of promo consideration from Modern Masters, but regardless, is there a DIY method to produce glazes, for those of us who are too remotely-located, poor, or just independently-minded and adventurous to immediately run to the brand-name stuff?
Also in this and some other videos, it would be interesting to know what effects can be handled as a solo act, versus those that require a helper (or two) to keep a wet surface, edge, etc. In this video, I found myself wondering how far I could get with the various glaze-working steps before worrying about it skinning over or otherwise becoming un-blendable, and if that's a problem, where and how I'd blend it from one session to the next.
I used the cheapest glazed the hardware store had and it worked great. For anbarea of 300 ft I probably used 1/4 of glaze and less of 1/2 of paint for the glazing technique itself. If you do it with a rag and in seçtions of no bigger than maybe 3 feet at a time you will donfine by yourself. I did by myself and finished glazing in less than 2 hours. I just moved my rag as if I was wiping the walls.
Can i use 70% alcohol?and what if i dont use glaze paint,will it be different?because i cant find any glaze here in philippines.i dont think we have what you used..please reply😍😍😍
🔥🔥🔥🔥
🤯🤯🤯🤯😍😍😍😍
like your work , You want to do my wine cellar :) ?
Can anyone answer question for me? I am ready to do very large area but using a small badger brush for large wall seems crazy to me. That would take forever. Is there another type of large brush I can use or would I have to use small badger brush???? If anyone can help please let me know.
If you want that exact same look, yes Do you have to use a small brush
@@RonaldLayman Thank you so much for replying! Since I have such a large area, wall is like 17' high, I guess I just need to do small area at time. Wish you worked out here near Nags Head N.C.